Congress has little time to avoid a government shutdown that is set to begin at 12:01 a.m. on Oct. 1. They are nowhere near an agreement.

After a six-week summer recess, lawmakers return to the Capitol on Monday facing a changed political landscape but a vexing, very familiar problem: figuring out how to avert a shutdown.

They have just three weeks to do so. Funding for the government runs out at the end of the fiscal year on Sept. 30, and former President Donald Trump is urging Republicans to force a shutdown unless certain demands are met. A shutdown would close federal agencies and national parks, while limiting public services and furloughing millions of workers just weeks before the election.

The presidential race looms over the final stretch for Congress; it is expected to leave again at the end of the month and return after Election Day. When the House left town for its summer break on July 25, President Joe Biden had just dropped out of the presidential race, Democrats were preparing to pick Vice President Kamala Harris as their new standard bearer, and Republicans were rushing to draw up a new playbook against Harris.

House Republicans have now settled on some lines of attack, which they’ll highlight in politically charged GOP hearings and investigations into both Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, on issues from border security to the Afghanistan withdrawal.

    • @[email protected]
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      568 days ago

      I feel like if we just required them all to be at work, every day, until these problems were resolved, they’d sort themselves out real quick. The fact that they get to not do their jobs and still take 6-week vacations every summer - and I mean every summer, because as you note, this always happens - is fucking ludicrous.

      • @[email protected]
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        318 days ago

        Hi good morning it’s your local congressman. Allow me to demonstrate how government doesn’t work by hardly showing up to my job, and when I do, I still don’t do it.

        • Billiam
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          88 days ago

          I hate the government so much I’m going to run for re-election multiple times to prove how terrible it is!

      • @[email protected]
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        8 days ago

        The long recesses aren’t fundamentally bad. In fact, there is an argument that they are a good thing. Because East Coast representatives can go home every night whereas West Coast are basically trapped in DC. Which means West Coast representatives are more likely to “compromise” during marathon sessions because they want to go home.

        And a good representative actually talks to their constituents during those breaks. Rather than abandoning them to go on a holiday like so many do.

        But yeah. Government shutdown should very much be “You are here until it is resolved” with no pay for the representatives.

      • theprogressivist
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        98 days ago

        Imagine us normal folk pulling this shit at our jobs. We’d get fired on the spot.

    • @ganksy
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      18 days ago

      But we have to. It’s tradition! Plus it’s the only real policy the gop has so they have to flaunt it.